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Who Needs
these Taxes?
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| Sep
1st 2009, C.P. Chandrasekhar |
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It
is not just a revamp, claims the government, but altogether
new. After many rounds of reduction of the marginal
tax rate and years of tinkering with the structure of
direct taxes it claims to have decided to drastically
alter the direct tax regime. To that end it has launched
a debate that would lead up to the introduction of legislation
to put in place a new direct tax code. The discussion
paper accompanying the draft code attempts to draw attention
to a number of features of the new code: the definition
of income, clarity regarding who can be taxed and the
treatment of exemptions. But discussion on the code
is likely to be dominated by the extent of taxation
of personal and corporate incomes that the new regime
would involve.
In this regard there is one aspect of the new code that
is welcome. It seeks to rationalize the innumerable
tax exemptions given to both high-income personal income
tax payers and corporations. The consequence of this
would be enhanced revenue generation and a greater degree
of transparency in the tax structure. It would also
possibly lead to greater equity, since most tax exemptions
are either directed at or more easily exploited by those
in higher income tax brackets.
Budget documents for 2009-10 estimate that the “tax
expenditures” on account of foregone taxes during 2008-09
amounted to Rs. 68,914 crore in the case of corporate
taxes, Rs. 5116 crore in the case of non-corporate (partnerships,
associations of persons, bodies of individuals) tax
payers and Rs. 34,437 crore in the case of income taxes.
This amounts to around 17 per cent of the gross tax
revenues which accrued to the central government according
to the revised estimates for that year. Recouping a
significant share of this would make a considerable
difference to the budgetary position of the government
and increase its fiscal manoeuvrability.
However, if this and greater transparency and equity
were the objectives that the government was pursuing
then a revamp of the existing tax law to get rid of
a wide range of unnecessary exemptions would have been
adequate. That the government is pursuing objectives
other than these is clear from its unorthodox decision
to include in the documents for discussion on the proposed
Direct Tax Bill a proposal for a new structure of direct
tax rates. That structure could lead to a sharp reduction
of taxes currently paid by individuals and corporates
in different tax brackets under the present tax regime.
The way this is to be ensured is a significant widening
of the tax slabs leading to a situation where individuals
would pay only 10 per cent tax as long as they remain
in the slab Rs.1,60,000 to Rs. 10,00,000, 20 per cent
in the slab Rs.10,00,000 to Rs. 25,00,000 and 30 per
cent thereafter. Further, the corporate tax rate is
to be reduced from 30 per cent to 25 per cent and the
minimum alternate tax (MAT) is to be calculated on the
value of gross assets, 2 per cent of which will have
to be paid at the minimum by all non-banking companies.
Currently, the income tax payer pays 10 per cent tax
on income between Rs. 1.6 lakh and Rs. 3 lakh, 20 per
cent between Rs. 3 lakh and Rs. 5 lakh, and 30 per cent
beyond Rs. 5 lakh. This means, for example that an individual
who earns a lakh of rupees every month by way of taxable
salary will see a substantial reduction in the amount
of income tax paid. Moreover, the ceiling on tax-free
acquisition of savings instruments has been increased
from Rs.1 lakh to Rs. 3 lakh, even though the range
of instruments eligible for that concession has been
reduced.
By specifying these rates and ranges, even while indicating
that they are also subject to discussion, clearly ties
the hand of the government. Taxes, which are increasingly
seen as “hurting” the tax payer and not as financing
beneficial public provision, are such that once the
government proposes a level it can go downwards from
there but not upwards without opposition. This implies
that the government has chosen to significantly cut
rates by widening tax slabs and adjusting the number
of rates.
The government’s own view is that such comparisons between
the proposed direct tax regime and the existing one
are not valid, because what we have is a structural
transformation in regime. One way of interpreting that
statement could be that it is implicitly declaring that
the potential reduction in revenues as a result of wider
slabs and lower rates would be more than neutralised
by the reduction in exemptions under the proposed regime
and by the increased compliance that a lighter tax regime
would encourage. For example salaries in the private
sector are expected to be computed on a cost-to-company
basis and the imputed rental value of rent free accommodation
(for example) is to be treated as part of the salary.
The danger here as can be seen even in the early responses
to the draft code is that the debate in the run up to
legislative action would force the restoration of a
range of exemptions while sticking with the proposed
new slabs and rates. Moreover, monitoring whether value
of perquisites are actually computed and included in
salary would be difficult and evasion through such exclusion
can be as much or higher than in the case of evasion
of post-exemption income and tax calculations. The expected
quid-pro-quo may not materialise and revenues may in
fact decline.
Given this, the belief that the new code would contribute
to an increase in tax collections is largely based on
the faith that reduced tax rates would contribute to
better compliance. Needless to say, this faith in the
“Laffer curve” is neither theoretically nor empirically
grounded. In the event, the new tax code is ill-advised
for at least two reasons. The first is that it comes
at a time when despite the consensus that public capital
formation and public expenditure on social infrastructure
and social protection are grossly inadequate in India,
the deficit in the budget of the central government
is rising. Even though there are expectations that the
deceleration in growth in India induced by the global
crisis is hitting bottom, there is substantial agreement
that the government must keep expenditure high if the
rate of growth is not to slump further. This would lead
to inflation if it is financed by borrowing rather than
by a draft on private savings through taxation given
the fact that food price inflation is already high and
a truant monsoon is likely to intensify supply constraints.
This then is the least propitious time to launch an
adventurous experiment in resource mobilisation involving
a cut in direct tax rates.
But the case against the code is not just short term.
It would also abort the much-needed correction of the
decline and stagnation of the tax-GDP ratio at the centre.
One striking feature of the 1990s, which was the first
decade of accelerated economic reform, is that despite
evidence of reasonably good growth rates and signs of
growing inequality, there was no improvement in the
Centre’s ability to garner a larger share of resources
to finance expenditures it considered crucial. Even
when corporate profits and managerial salaries were
reported to be rising sharply, taxes did not appear
as buoyant. The Central tax GDP ratios in India were
declining for much of this period. And despite the increase
in the ratio in recent years, they exceeded the level
they were at in 1989-90 only in 2006-07 (Chart ). Despite
high growth, improved profitability and signs of increased
inequality (which should improve tax collection), the
increase has been adequate to just about put the tax
GDP ratio back to its immediate pre-liberalisation levels.
Thus an effort to raise this ratio even further is what
is called for.
If these imperatives have been ignored in the new code
it must be because of the view that households taxed
lightly would increase their consumption and firms taxed
lightly would invest more, and enhance consumption and
investment would drive growth. There are three problems
with this argument. First, it underestimates the role
that public expenditure in general and public capital
formation in particular plays in crowding in private
investment, as amply illustrated by past Indian experience.
Second, it privileges GDP growth even at the cost of
reducing the role of direct taxation in moderating the
inequalising character of recent economic growth. Finally,
it completely ignores the important role of tax-financed
public expenditure in alleviating poverty, providing
social protection and advancing human development.
The tax code is a signal that UPA II plans to continue
with the policy of cajoling private capital into investing
for growth with concessions that have adverse equity
and welfare implications.
Chart
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